Subway door hogs and foot-dragging tourists are New Yorker’s top annoyances, a Post survey has found.

“It’s a hospitality issue,” Rashaun Simon, 23, a Williams-Sonoma store clerk from Jamaica, Queens, said of the subway offenders. “They’re the same people who don’t give up their seats to pregnant women.”

Of more than 300 city residents surveyed, one quarter pinned subway door blockers as their biggest pet peeve, followed by a fifth that chose slow-walking tourists and nearly 13 percent that named cabbies who gab on their cellphones while at the wheel.

It’s been a week of people being driven over the edge by the city’s aggravations.

Upper West Side resident Breffny Flynn, 43, entered the canon of crazy New York heroes — and ended up at a local station house — after head-butting a movie production assistant who, while standing guard at a film shoot, had stopped him from passing through.

Miles Moriarty, a 27-year-old estate planner also from the Upper West Side, said he could relate to Flynn’s frustration.

“I can’t stand it. The [assistant directors] pushing me around like a child and not being able to park in my own garage,” he said.

And, of course, there’s JetBlue flight attendant Steven Slater, of Belle Harbor, Queens, who made a getaway on a plane’s emergency slide at JFK Airport after allegedly getting in a fight with a passenger over her carry-on luggage.

The top three grievances were uniform among residents across all five boroughs — with the exception of Queens, where drivers who block the box, or obstruct intersections with their cars, edged out cellphone-using cabdrivers as the third worst annoyance.

Brooklynites had a special dislike for slow-walking tourists, placing them ahead of the subway-door blockers and cellphone cabbies as the most infuriating thing about city living.

“I hate the slow tourists that stand in the middle of the way,” said Ashley Milling, 21, a student from Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn.

“They should have a designated time for tourists, from 3 p.m. to 10 p.m.”

Brooklynites are also tired of the trendy — hipsters irk 10 percent of the borough’s residents.

“Property prices go up because of them. They wear those tight pants, flannel shirts, suit jackets, man purses, and there is no need for a scarf in June,” complained Greenpointer Corey McSweeney.

And Staten Island had the highest number of people singling out bicycle delivery guys.